Huaben

Sanguozhi Pinghua, published between 1321 and 1323

A huaben (Chinese: 话本; pinyin: huàben) is a Chinese short- or medium-length story or extended novella written mostly in vernacular language, sometimes including simple classical language. In contrast to the full-length Chinese novel, it is generally not divided into chapters and recounts a limited number of characters or events, although some huaben fictions, such as Sanguozhi Pinghua, contain upwards of some 80,000 Chinese characters. The earliest huaben are reported in the 12th century during the Song dynasty, but the genre did not see its true artistic and creative potential until the Ming dynasty, and after the mid-17th century did not produce works of originality. In the development of Chinese fiction, the huaben are heirs of the bianwen (Buddhist tales) and chuanqi of the Tang dynasty, and are the predecessors of the stories and full-length novels of the Ming.[1]

  1. ^ "The Novella", in Wilt Idema and Lloyd Haft. A Guide to Chinese Literature (Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, The University of Michigan, 1997, ISBN 978-0-89264-099-7), p. 212.